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“Cherry-Picked” Humanitarian Interventions:A Complexity Approach to Explaining Libya 2011
By Sarah WilbanksSenior Thesis, International Relations
Brown University, 2012
Research Puzzle
• Long history of selectivity in military humanitarian interventions
• Libya intervention– Resolution 1973 passed one month after the
outbreak of violence– Why Libya and not Rwanda, Darfur, DRC, Syria?
Research Question
Given the selectivity of military humanitarian interventions in the post-Cold War era, what explains
the swift and multilateral intervention in Libya in March 2011?
Intellectual Context
Theory Explanation for Humanitarian Intervention
Rationalism -National security, geostrategic, economic (oil) interests- States are “black boxes” (unitary actors)
Republican Liberalism
-Domestic factors-Media influence (CNN Effect)
Constructivism -International norms-Responsibility to Protect Doctrine (adopted at the World Summit in 2005)
My Argument
A comprehensive and realistic understanding of why the international community intervened in Libya in 2011 can only be obtained through the adoption of a complexity approach to the study
of international politics.
What is a complexity?
• “An interdisciplinary field of research that seeks to explain how large numbers of relatively simple entities organize themselves without the benefit of any central controller into a collective whole that creates patterns, uses information, and in some cases, evolves and learns.” – Melanie Mitchell, Complexity: A Guided Tour
• Examines the humanitarian intervention in Libya as a complex system made up of intertwined actors and components that interact, respond to, and evolve with one another and their environment
• Complex system characteristics:– Self-organization– Non-linearity– Emergence
Source: R. Lewin, Complexity: Life at the Edge of Chaos (New York, NY: MacMillan Publishing Company), 1992.
Research Design
• Methods:– Single case study approach– Process tracing/Counterfactual analysis
• John Holland’s framework of complexity:– Focuses on the interactions, adaptations, evolution,
and emergences of system components – Describes the processes of the complex system
Findings
• 4 emergences of unique international orders– Significantly narrowed the path of available
options, and drove the international community towards a military intervention
– International order = behavior, norms, structures
• 5 essential system variables– Catalyzed emergences
Variables
1. Qaddafi’s threats and rhetoric
2. The defection of members of the Libyan regime 3. Arab League and regional support for a no-fly zone 4. Hillary Clinton, Susan Rice, and Samantha Power as key individuals
5. Qaddafi forces’ imminent siege on Benghazi
Emergences
I. A change in discourse
II. Shift from rhetoric to action
III. The crystallization of an international order for military intervention
IV. A deadline for action
The International Community’s Path to Military Intervention in Libya 2011
Adapted from: Jörg Sydow, Georg Schreyögg, and Jochen Koch. “Organizational Path Dependence: Opening the Black Box,” Academy of Management Review 34, no. 4 (2009): 689-709, 692.
Implications and Future Research
• Implications– Can help actors realize the mostefficient path of action for the situation at hand– Future research must incorporate factors and actor
interactions outside of conventional theories
• Future Research– Cross-case comparison
• May reveal patterns prevalent throughout previous interventions
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